Cryptome Triple Cross

16 March 2012. Set up to publish documents on the use of conventional XX
duplicity to deceive and circumvent more deviously. To examine and expose
XX as camouflage for XXX and beyond. Submissions welcomed:
cryptomexxx[at]earthlink.net

The following eight triple-crossing files are from the
CIA Freedom of Information Act Electronic
Reading Room. These exemplify triple-crossing by spy services through
FOIA releases, favoritism to cooperative media, deliberate leaks, official
publications and agency-approved publications by members and former
members to use the appearance of openness as disinformation, information
management and propaganda. Their purpose is to distort through devious disclosure
of files describing such techniques and at a deeper level to demonstrate
triple-cross tertiarily.

Real espionage is actually like this. Winston Churchill, a keen aficionado
of wartime deception, described the spying game as tangle within tangle,
plot and counterplot, ruse and treachery, cross and double-cross, true agent,
false agent, double agent, gold and steel, the bomb, the dagger and the firing
party . . . interwoven in many a texture so intricate as to be incredible
and yet true. Spying is itself a form of fiction, the creating of invented
worlds, which perhaps explains why so many of the best spy novelists were
once in the intelligence business: W. Somerset Maugham, Ian Fleming, Graham
Greene and le Carré himself.

Ben Macintyres latest book, Double Cross: The True Story of the
D-Day Spies, will be published in July.

A NATO Ministers of Defense meeting begins at NATO Headquarters in Brussels,
Belgium on Friday, Feb. 3, 2012. Defense Ministers from across Europe as
well as U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta are attending the meeting. (Jacquelyn
Martin, Pool)

A simple case of XXX is to deploy a comparatively easy to discover duplicity
to conceal one more deeply protected. Multi-layered security may serve as
a multi-layered decoy to lead away from a deep-bunkered treasure. Identifiably
weak comsec may divert from more valuable comms. A small error to indicate
a larger mistake which hides a great delusion.